The bizarre event which is most likely to be seen in Nova Scotia involves hollowing out a giant pumpkin to use as a raft to paddle across lake in a race against the clock.

The self explanatory mud-pit belly flopping – which is a much-loved sport in Athens, Texas, U.S – was second in the poll with underwater hockey making third place.

Other weird sports to make the top ten include bog snorkelling which is practiced in Llanwrtyd Wells in Wales, extreme ironing – and professional gurning.

Bog snorkelling is one of the UK’s most bizarre sports (Image: SWNS)

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Chess boxing which combines the mental dexterity of chess with the physical test of boxing with alternate rounds of each sport to create a bizarre hybrid sport also made the list.

Greg Tatton-Brown from Online Casino Casumo.com, who carried out the study to launch their Play Absurd ( www.aworldofplay.com/play-absurd ) campaign, said: “We’ve made it our mission to uncover the country’s most absurd games and celebrate the people who play them.

“From bog snorkelling in Wales to egg tossing in Lincolnshire, the UK is a hotbed of inventive sporting activities which seek to test our physical endurance as well as the limits of our imagination whilst building friendships that last a lifetime.”

The study also found one third of squeamish Brits are grossed out by the thought of bog snorkelling – which requires the competitor to don their snorkel and flippers and swim down a watery trench cut through a peat bog.

Giant pumpkin kayaking is most likely to be seen in Nova Scotia (Image: Alamy)

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Underwater hockey, also known as Octopush, was considered the most dangerous of the absurd sports in the countdown

It involves two teams battling it out to manoeuvre a hockey puck into their opponent’s goal – along the bottom of a full swimming pool.

While a number of the sports appear self-explanatory from their names, others stumped Brits with their unusual rules and equipment.

Fifty three per cent were able to identify the sport of ‘wife carrying’ by a description of its objective, which challenges contestants to carry their spouse through a series of increasingly difficult obstacles.

Bossaball proved even more baffling, with only 17 per cent of those surveyed able to identify the sport, which has an inflatable court and use of trampolines to score points against your opponent.

Over two thirds of those surveyed had no idea what you would use a braffin for, and only five per cent linked the piece of apparatus to gurning, where participants are required to wear the item around their necks while contorting their face to its limits.

Extreme ironing sees competitors take up the task in risky locations (Image: PA)

Despite their prominence on UK shores, more than seven in 10 Brits are yet to try any of the top weirdest sports the world has to offer.

Of the 2,000 people surveyed, only 58 have placed themselves inside a giant inflatable hamster ball to go Zorbing, and 17 have attempted Harry Potter’s favourite Hogwarts pastime Quidditch, though their feet and broomsticks remained firmly on the ground.

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One in ten would like to try their hand at egg-throwing, which originates in Swaton, Lincolnshire, and dates back to 1332.

And half of those surveyed would happily go along to watch one of these weird sports if a tournament was held nearby.

One in ten would like to go along to watch a dog surfing contest, and would be intrigued to see what a mud-pit bellyflop involves.

Casumo’s Greg Tatton-Brown added: “Over the course of the next four months we’ll take you on an episodic tour of the UK and show you just how wonderful some of these pastimes can be when people #PlayAbsurd.

Kabaddi is a game where players must hold their breath and tag out others before running out of air (Image: Coventry Telegraph)

“In our first set of videos we’ve sent internet funnyman Anto Sharp to Wales, to take part in a bog snorkelling contest to see how he gets on.”

Kabaddi, which came twelfth in the list of most unusual sports, was founded in India, and is a game of tag where 14 players must hold their breath and tag out the rest of the participants before they run out of air.

Outhouse racing, which came eleventh in the countdown, requires teams of three to race their decorated toilet down a Virginia City street to reach a toilet paper finish line before their opponent.

Play Absurd have also produced a visual puzzle to raise awareness of some of the strangest sports in the UK, which tasks readers with spotting the absurd sports fans in the crowd.